252 Mr. J. Miers on the genus Cacabus. 
along the tube ; the stamens and style are exserted 14 inch be- 
yond the mouth of the tube, the authers being 6 lines long and 
a line broad ; the style thickens towards the summit, and is ter- 
minated by a stigma formed of two adpressed lobes, lmed within 
by a thick viscous gland; the ovarium is about 3 lines in dia- 
meter and 3 lines in height, quite conical, and seated on a large 
fleshy and coloured gland. 
2. Dyssochroma longipes? Solandra longipes, Sendt. in Mart. 
& Endl. Fl. Bras. vi. 159; Walp. Rep. vi..573 ;-—fruticosa, 
glabra, foliis congestis, glabris, utrinque acutis, mtegerrimis ; 
floribus nutantibus ; pedicellis calyeem subeequantibus, vel su- 
perantibus, fructiferis valde elongatis : calyce 5-partito ; corolla 
infundibuliformi, e basi sensim dilatata, limbo breviter 5-fido, 
laciniis acutis revolutis : stigmate longissimo spatio in stylum 
decurrente.— Brasilia australl. 
The above is all the information I have been able to obtain of 
this species : it will be seen to differ in no respect from the pre- 
ceding one (as far as we may judge from the foregoing characters) 
except in the shorter lobes of the corolla: the gradual dilatation 
of the corolla, without any sudden ventricose enlargement, is 
very often seen in D. viridiflora. 
CaCABUS. 
This genus was first proposed by Bernhardi for a Peruvian 
plant of Dombey’s collection, which was many years before ac- 
curately described and figured by L’Heritier (Stirp. Nov. Angl. 
p- 48. tab. 22), under the name of Physalis prostrata, and which 
appears to have since escaped farther notice: I find other spe- 
cies allied to it, which are all distinguished by their inflated calyx, 
generally of very delicate texture, remarkably reticulated, marked 
by dark green lines and veins, and which, swelling after the fall 
of the flower, eventually incloses the fruit, as in Physalis and 
several other genera. They have all herbaceous stems, are of a 
prostrate or straggling habit, and they bear a very striking re- 
semblance to Nolana, especially in their fleshy flexuose branches, 
often geminate leaves, large campanular blue flowers, with a 
somewhat pentangular border, and marked with fifteen longitu- 
dinal nervures, as in that genus: the stamens are also included 
and somewhat unequal in size: mdeed so near is this similarity 
in external appearance, in one species, that I have constantly 
passed over, without suspicion, a specimen of Mathews’s collec- 
tion, named by him “ Nolana spathulata, R. & P.,” which I did 
not consider it necessary to examine, as it was not in fruit. 
There exists in Sir William Hooker’s herbarium, a plant be- 
longing to this genus, which appears to correspond well with the 
description of the No/ana inflata of the ‘ Flora Peruviana,’ a spe- 
